Read Mistress of Redemption Online
Authors: Joey W. Hill
“I love you, my dearest and only
Lord.”
121
Joey W. Hill
Chapter Twelve
“Clear!”
Fire through his body, jerking him,
his heart pumping irregularly,
faltering, stopping again.
Oblivion.
All I want is oblivion.
“Again!”
Heart yelping in protest.
Don’t make
me feel… For one moment, don’t
make me feel…
Air, painful, dragging into the lungs.
Heart feeling like a jagged rock
pounding on the inside of his chest.
Fire in his midsection.
Light… Shattering agony, so bad that
sound was coming from him… How
could he hear his own screams when
his vocal cords had been burned
away an eternity ago along with all
vestiges of a physical body? But yes,
that was his voice. He was
screaming, screaming the way a
banshee screams. His eyes were
squinting at the light, streaming with
tears as he stared wildly around the
room of people, things that he
couldn’t see clearly but fumbled to
understand. Medical equipment,
lights. He spoke words, he didn’t
know what, a wild stream of
gibberish that turned the faces around
him as white as their clothing. There
was actually a moment they all stood
back and he felt the weight of their
wide-eyed stares even if he could not
clearly see the features of their faces.
Then he collapsed back on the gurney
and the moment passed. They
pounced back on him.
A haze as time churned forward.
Lying somewhere, somewhere soft.
Voices.
“You should have seen this guy in the
ER…it was like we were transported
to the set of
The Exorcist
. Scariest
shit I’ve ever heard coming out of his
mouth. His eyes…”
Nathan felt a shudder run through the
hand resting on the blood pressure
cuff wrapped around his arm.
“Colleen even fainted, if you can
believe that. Man, nothing fazes that
woman. We’ve had homeless people
in here that acted way less crazy.”
“Well, what did he say?”
“It wasn’t what he said, it was how
he said it… To be honest, I don’t
think anyone knows what he said. It
was just…it sounds stupid, but it was
like the room got cold as Alaska
when he started screaming. For a
minute we were all just frozen. I felt
like I’d just found out my whole life
was over, the worst feeling of
despair and rage you’ve ever felt.
You know how sometimes when you
get so crazed by everything around
you and you want to break out and
you don’t know how? You think up
some crazy shit like shooting
everyone? That was what this feeling
was like.”
“James, I think you’ve been on too
many back-to-back shifts.”
Trembling, shuddering, speaking
words that he didn’t remember…
The
worst feeling
of despair and rage
you’ve ever felt.
That was probably
as close to the truth as anything.
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Mistress of Redemption
Consigned to Hell, denied the ability
to scream until he’d woken in a
mortal body again.
He lost consciousness again, leaving
the invisible James and his cohort
behind.
Moved through a thick fog where he
had no sense of anything except he
wasn’t being hurt, tormented, burning
or freezing. But he did ache. Deep
inside him something ached, wanting
to call out a name. He couldn’t
remember that name. That was the
most horrible thing of all. He had to
remember that name. Had to
remember it…
For several days they kept him under
heavy sedation, for he was so
disoriented that everything frightened
him. They told him his name and it
meant nothing. He forgot it a moment
later and had to ask again, mumble
for it. They treated him with some
impatience, which, compared to what
he’d known, was akin to being given
every consideration. As some
cognizance returned, he noted one of
his hands always remained
handcuffed to the bedrail. He had a
vague sense of a guard walking in
and out at times, sitting outside the
door. A prisoner. He’d always been
a prisoner. The thought stretched his
face in a grim smile. Having skin and
a body…was strange.
Perhaps he was free now, despite the
handcuffs? He didn’t want to be free.
Needed that name. Need the name.
Then he’d doze and the nightmares
would come back, nightmares even
more
powerful because he knew they
weren’t nightmares at all.
Fire…monsters…every fear that a
person could imagine having. Those
that lived in the darkest part of the
psyche, things he hadn’t even known
he feared above all the other, more
mundane fears, such as falling, being
buried alive, spiders crawling across
the skin to bite the most tender areas
of the body, high-pitched shrieking
laughter while being tortured, cold,
darkness… No, there were worse
fears. Shut in a small, dark place
deep under the earth, being forgotten,
unimportant for all eternity, tortured
for amusement until the mind had
shattered at the weight of all of it.
Knowing that it was all deserved, so
not even a sense of injustice
provided a haven. There would be no
escape from it, not ever.
He’d surrendered. Just surrendered,
with no other choice. Standing free of
all bonds, no longer even trying to
draw away as everything was done to
him and more. In the end, rationality
fled, the mind, soul and body broken,
nothing left. He couldn’t remember
the last time he’d thought of anything,
a macabre meditative state based on
torment instead of peace. His soul
had floated, no longer weighed down
by anything.
Then, lying on cold, wet stone, he’d
felt a touch, a brief flash of eyes too
powerful to be met, wings so pure
white the beauty of them choked him.
Goodbye, my child. You have paid
for your sins. Now forgive yourself
and love her as she
deserves.
Don’t fuck up.
That from a different presence, male. A brush of gray
wings along his brow that offered
encouragement with the warning.
A few days later, he remembered a
conversation. Dr. Adams.
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Joey W. Hill
“Mr. Powell…can you understand
me? You were stabbed in a fight at
the prison.
…died for nine minutes before we
restarted your heart. We think…Mr.
Powell? Still with us? We think that
may explain some of your
disorientation and your memory
problems…”
It was an understatement. At first, his
vision was cloudy and he could only
see blurry outlines of people or
things. Everything startled him. Noise
was too much. All of it could be the
fire, monsters…
With his physical body, the attempt at
rational thought returned. As he
gained in strength, his mind tried to
tell him that he’d had some weird
hallucination when he was gutted in
the knife fight, that none of it had
been real.
No, it wasn’t his mind trying to
convince him of that. Not exactly.
Jonathan. The part of him that would
always be afraid of truth. But
sometime during those minutes when
he’d stood on the other side of the
threshold between life and death,
Nathan had taken the reins and
Jonathan wasn’t getting them back, no
matter what he tried.
Nathan. That was what someone had
called him, long ago when he was
young and more possibilities had
been open to him. Then later…
Nathan and Jonathan. Two parts of
the same whole. Made whole by
someone… Someone…
It hurt so badly, the not knowing, that
as he lay in bed on the tenth day he
curled into himself and made the
agony worse by putting the pressure
of the position on the largest stab
wound across his belly. He cupped
his hand over it, held it as he rocked.
I have to remember, I have to
remember… It’s not real. You’re
losing your fucking mind.
There’s no one. No one…
I love you, Nathan. I always will.
He jerked up out of the bed and
immediately bent double, cursing as
the stitches tore and blood leaked
onto his fingers. Looking down, he
saw the blood drip and land on his
bare groin, the skin of his cock. He
had piercings. Why hadn’t he noticed
that before? Jesus Christ, piercings
all over the place. Barbells up the
bottom, a ring in the tip, a ring in his
ball sac. His fingers touched the
ladder, explored it, even as the blood
wet his fingers and his genitals,
mixing with the metal. A canvas of
pain and memory, tormenting him as
badly as his nightmares.
Her voice. He’d heard her voice.
Who was she? His life depended on
it, he was certain.
It was three months before he’d
recovered enough mentally and
physically to the satisfaction of the
doctors to be released from the
hospital. By then, he’d remembered
who he was and why the police
treated him with such hostility, doing
the bare minimum for a prisoner who
was in jail for aiding someone who’d
tried to kill two cops. He found out
he had six months left on his
sentence.
Was it a dream? Was all of it some
type of twisted retelling of
A
Christmas Carol
to get him to change
his ways? No and yes. Because that
night
had
happened to Scrooge. It
was a dream, but it was real as well.
It’s illusion and reality both…
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Mistress of Redemption
“Aarrgghhh…” Back in his cell, he
snarled into his pillow, pressing his
face against the scratchy surface. He
wanted to beat his fists on the
concrete walls until they were
bloody to assuage this gnawing
inside. “Who are you?
Who are
you
?”
* * * * *
He kept quiet, kept to himself during
those six months. He began to write
letters.
Letters that he tore up and rewrote
again and again, until he was
regularly bartering for more packs of
notebook paper. When he finally got
one right, he’d carefully address it
and put it on the shelf above his bunk,
never mailing a single one, though the
stack grew. It wasn’t time to mail
them. He didn’t know how he knew
that, just that it felt right. He was
following his intuition. Lauren,
Narcissa, Lady Jane… Even Mac
Nighthorse.
His mother…then Eliza. The hardest
one of all, a letter he would have to
put on her grave because he had no
ability to change what he’d done to
the first person who’d ever truly
loved him. He had to discard at least
two versions because the tears he
couldn’t manfully control made the
ink run and stain.
When he wasn’t doing that, he did
laundry duty or walked around the
yard by himself. He paced by the
portion of the fence that let him see
the highway coming from the east.
Keeping his eyes focused there the
whole time, he felt like a tiger in a
cage, waiting for release to go in that
direction.
A red car…a woman with dark
hair…
The other inmates gave him no more
trouble. He didn’t think to question it
until Mario stated it baldly to him
one day while they pulled laundry out
of one of the carts.
Mario was in for life and had been at
the prison over twenty years.
“You got the ‘Come to Jesus’ look,
the look of a man who know what
Hell be like,”
he stated matter-of-factly. “The
others don’t want no part of that. Our
boy Jonathan, he know what true fear
is now.”
“Nathan,” he corrected automatically,
and started folding.
Studying himself in the mirror in his
cell, he saw it. A disturbing, haunting
quality, something apparently so
uncomfortable that many of the
inmates never met his gaze now. In
fact, most gave him a wide berth
entirely.
That was fine, because nothing but
that name he couldn’t remember
could ease the loneliness inside him.
He couldn’t face his own haunting
expression for long either. It
reminded him of too many things.
Horrors that shifted in his mind like
lingering shadows, too elusive to
hold on to, but dogging him
nevertheless. Particularly in his